Gold Street Caffe – Albuquerque, New Mexico (CLOSED)

The Gold Street Caffe, one of the true downtown revitalization success stories.

When you’re alone and life is making you lonely
You can always go – downtown
When you’ve got worries, all the noise and the hurry
Seems to help, I know – downtown
Just listen to the music of the traffic in the city
Linger on the sidewalk where the neon signs are pretty
How can you lose?

The lights are much brighter there
You can forget all your troubles, forget all your cares
So go downtown, things’ll be great when you’re
Downtown – no finer place, for sure
Downtown – everything’s waiting for you.

Just a few years ago, the lyrics to Petula Clark’s January, 1965 number one single, would not have been used to describe Albuquerque’s downtown area. In fact, the downtown area was more ghost town than boomtown except for during weekday business hours and late night at bars.

Even in September, 1998 when Sarah Brown launched the Gold Street Caffe in a historic building circa 1911, the notion that Albuquerque’s downtown would become a social, economic and cultural hub might have been met by skepticism save for the unwavering optimism of visionaries who recognized the area’s potential beyond its historic attachment to the Mother Road, Route 66. In March, 2006, Sarah sold her restaurant to general manager Matt Nichols whom Duke City diners might remember as the former owner of the defunct Fajitaville, a restaurant perhaps ahead of its time.

Today, the downtown area has become a veritable gold mine and since its launch just over a decade ago, the Gold Street Caffe has been one of the best reasons to go downtown. It’s also one of the best indications that downtown revitalization is working. If you’re prospecting for breakfast, there’s no need to look further.

For breakfast, lunch and dinner, the Gold Street Caffe is one happening place.

The Gold Street Caffe has been, practically since its inception, one of the very best places in town for breakfast. During weekends diners tend to be more hip and trendy and more likely to be bedecked in nose rings and tattoos than in affluent finery. During weekdays, it’s Albuquerque’s movers and shakers who hold court in a restaurant whose architectural style, energy and personality would fit in nicely in Soho. Note: These dining trends aren’t absolutes, just observations I’ve made. The point is, the Gold Street Caffe has a very broad appeal.

It’s an appeal that transcends demographics and socioeconomic strata. The commonality among the throngs is that they all love the Gold Street Caffe and don’t mind the inevitable wait to be seated. Because of overflow crowds, smaller dining parties may be asked to share a large table, but no one really minds. No one is a stranger for long at this restaurant, especially for breakfast when it’s not uncommon for close-proximity tables to inspire conversation. What are they talking about? Probably the special of the day, maybe the pancakes.

What makes breakfast at The Gold Street Caffe so special? Perhaps it starts with the honey-chile glazed bacon which might define porcine perfection. Just ask readers of the Alibi news magazine who perenially accord “best of” honors to that bacon during annual polls. An enterprising Washington, D.C. chef has, in fact, arrived at the realization that bacon is an aphrodisiac and hosts very popular monthly Pork and Pinot dinners. Here’s hoping the Gold Street Caffe follows suit with its one-of-a-kind bacon.

Eggs Eleganza on Brioche.

It also wouldn’t be breakfast at the Caffe without Sage Bakehouse toast (whole wheat, sourdough or farm bread) with butter and jam. The Sage Bakehouse is a Santa Fe institution crafting the staff-of-life to a golden hued perfection. The Gold Street Caffe toasts it lightly, just enough to melt the butter. What makes the sourdough special is that you can actually taste the sour dough; it’s not just a name.

You’ll also strike a rich vein with the Caffe’s Sooo Good Buttermilk Pancakes–fluffy orbs made from scratch and served with real creamery butter and Vermont syrup (the best syrup in town). Whether you have a short stack or a tall stack, there are few pancakes to compare to these. A “short stack” is three pancakes almost big enough to cover the entire plate. A “tall stack” could feed a small, developing nation. You can also add blueberries or bananas for a pittance, but they’re wholly unnecessary.

According to Saveur magazine, an estimated 90 percent of Americans have never tasted real maple syrup. Most breakfast syrup consumed in America, Saveur claims, is “of the high-fructose corn variety dressed up with caramel color to make it look like the real stuff.” Real maple syrup makes a difference, especially when the pancakes are exceptional to begin with as the Gold Street Caffe’s pancakes are.

A short stack–three pancakes with REAL maple syrup

24-carot satisfaction is available with Eggs Eleganza on Brioche (pictured above), two poached eggs atop inch-thick toasted green chile brioche upon which local goat cheese is spread. This elegant extravagance also includes fresh chopped herbs and lovely cherry tomatoes. The Caffe seems to specialize in poached eggs, preparing them as well as any restaurant in which I’ve ever had them. For a mere pittance you can also add a delicious, pink grilled salmon.

Another entree showcasing the best poached eggs in town is a weekend special called Southwest Eggs Benedict, the Caffe’s interpretation on the classic breakfast dish first created in New York City’s Waldorf Astoria more than a hundred years ago. It’s a liberal interpretation, but one which honors the traditional version. Instead of the traditional English muffin base, the Gold Street Cafe starts with two of its fabulous green chile cheese biscuits atop of which are stacked slices of the legendary honey-chile glazed bacon, two perfectly prepared poached eggs and a jalapeno Hollandaise sauce.

I’ve longed contended that it should be illegal for any New Mexico restaurant serving Eggs Benedict not to embellish its Hollandaise sauce without green chile, but jalapenos aren’t far off the mark—especially when this dish also includes green chile cheese biscuits and red chile-honey glazed bacon. This triumvirate of pleasant piquancy makes this my very favorite Eggs Benedict dish in town. In its annual Food & Wine issue for 2012, Albuquerque The Magazine awarded the Gold Street Caffe a Hot Plate Award signifying the selection of its Southwest Eggs Benedict as one of the “most interesting, special and tasty dishes around.” Considering the thousands of potential selections, to be singled out is quite an honor.

Setting a gold standard are the Caffe’s Gold Street steak and eggs. If fault can be found with this entree, it might be that the six-ounce marinated and grilled sirloin steak will leave you wanting more. You might feel cheated at how quickly this savory steak disappears from your plate. Fortunately, you’ll be consoled by two eggs (any style), herb-roasted potatoes, Cheddar-Jack cheese, fresh salsa and warm flour tortillas (or you can substitute Sage Bakehouse toast).

The menu also includes “the best breakfast burrito” (the entree’s name, not necessary my assessment), a warm flour tortilla generously stuffed with fresh scrambled eggs, cheese and roasted potatoes smothered with your choice of the restaurant’s signature red or green chile. While that sounds like pretty standard fare for New Mexico’s favorite breakfast dish, under the masterful hands of the kitchen staff at the Gold Street Cafe, this breakfast burrito just might be the best part of waking up.

That is, unless you order the Gold Street Caffe Belgian Waffle, in which case you might consider that the restaurant’s best waker-upper. As with the aforementioned pancakes, the waffles are served with real creamery butter and pure organic maple syrup as well as fresh seasonal fruit, apples and cinnamon or apricots and brown sugar.

Gold Street Steak and Eggs

Restaurant owner Matt Nichols, a graduate of the California Culinary Academy did his own bit for downtown revitalization by changing the restaurant’s menu so that lunch wasn’t so focused on salads and sandwiches and opening it up for dinner starting in March, 2004. Lunch and dinner menus include such starters as Dungeness crab cakes and flash-fried calamari and entrees such as fish tacos and enchiladas.

Our inaugural dinner experience–shortly after dinner became part of the restaurant’s repertoire–was as disappointing as our breakfast excursions have been memorable. I have it on good authority from the Albuquerque Journal’s luminous restaurant critic Andrea Lin that dinner is now much improved. If the quality of dinner approximates that of breakfast, we’ve got another reason to go downtown.

In 2008, Nichols launched a sister restaurant to the Gold Street Caffe. Situated along the Pan American frontage road area within easy walking distance to the Century 24 theater, The Cup offered many of the favorite breakfast, lunch and dinner specialties that have made its elder sibling a popular draw. Alas, what it couldn’t offer was the funky vibe its sister possesses in droves. The Cup closed within a few months.

Southwest Eggs Benedict

Shortly after the Gold Street Caffe launched in 1998, the Albuquerque Journal’s restaurant critic at the time described the restaurant as “comfy yet chic.” Those are qualities the restaurant maintains more than a decade later, qualities which can’t be built into a restaurant’s ambience, but which some restaurants seem to be imbued with. The Gold Street Caffe is hip and happening, just like Albuquerque’s rejuvenated downtown.

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About Gil Garduno

Since 2008, the tagline on Gil’s Thrilling (And Filling) Blog has invited you to “Follow the Culinary Ruminations of New Mexico’s Sesquipedalian Sybarite.” To date, nearly 1 million visitors have trusted (or at least visited) my recommendations on nearly 1,100 restaurant reviews. Please take a few minutes to tell me what you think. Whether you agree or disagree with me, I'd love to hear about it.

7 Comments on “Gold Street Caffe – Albuquerque, New Mexico (CLOSED)”

Indeed Sarita: I went to the website for the phone# wherein I was told their box was full. Per a link to another Foodie Blog highlighted on their Home website page, I read Folks noting e.g. 8/8 “The entire place has been gutted…”
Whoa! OMG! Their interior pic looked like a most inviting a place I shoulda gone!
Lest I sound like a “something-or-other”, this is why I belabor asking Folks to Comment on venues…i.e. am playing the Age Card… as it will be their responsibility of reminding me of places I would be most appreciative of should’ve or might consider visiting in the coming week. (Enter Sad Emoji) (:-(
Sacre Blue….has no one visited just a door or three away https://www.nmgastronome.com/?p=39159#comments?

On 27 July 2017, Gold Street Caffe’s posted on their Facebook page: “Gold Street Caffe will be closed for renovations for the near future. We apologize for any inconvenience.” Could the “gutted” nature of the place be for renovations? Unfortunately, subsequent Facebook pages even through mid September give no indication. Both Yelp and TripAdvisor indicate the Caffe is closed, yet the Caffe still has an active (and recently redesigned) Website and Facebook page.

This being the 21st Century, any restaurant worth its weight in chile-rubbed bacon needs to keep the dining public apprised of its status. If it’s closed, the Caffe owes it to their faithful patrons to let them know. Ditto if it’s undergoing renovations.

I went for lunch and was less impressed. Apparently I should have tried breakfast. The soup and sandwich were both pretty good…Albuquerque turkey and a chipotle chicken soup. I was a little disappointed with the service though – I wanted a very light lunch and asked if I was able to get just a half sandwich. The waitress said that was no problem, but when the bill came I had been charged for the 1/2 sandwich soup combo. I asked her about it and she basically told me that I had to pay whether I wanted the soup or not! Obviously I knew I could order the sandwich and not eat the soup, but I felt kind of mislead when I had asked her about it before ordering. Anyway, she brought me the soup to go it and it was fine, just overall not something I will rave about.

So good and so fun!
We have lots of yummy breakfasts at our place and there are no shortage of options when it comes to eating out but when I need inspiration I get a bacon and anything fix. And lucky me, I get to go tomorrow!

Southwest Eggs Benedict is as good a variation on the EB theme as I have found anywhere, and has percolated to near the top of my Duke City breakfast dishes. The bacon is legendary. My buddy Willie has some put inside his burrito.